William Bloom appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Spatt, J.), which principally (1) decertified a class of plaintiffs who asserted claims against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”), and (2) denied the plaintiffs’ motion to permit Bloom, who was not a named party to the action before the District Court, to intervene. However, Bloom failed to notice an appeal of the denial of the motion to allow him to intervene. As a nonparty, he cannot otherwise challenge the decertification order on appeal. Accordingly, we DISMISS the appeal.
BACKGROUND
This appeal arises out of a lawsuit first filed in 2005 that eventually involved four named plaintiffs. The named plaintiffs asserted various state and federal causes of action against Washington Mutual Bank, FA (“WMB”) and other entities affiliated with Washington Mutual. The named plaintiffs alleged that they and thousаnds of other customers had been charged modest but improper fees when they made early payments on their home mortgages. In 2007 the District Court dismissed several of the plaintiffs’ claims, inсluding a claim under the Truth in Lending Act (“TILA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq., because none of the named plaintiffs had alleged that the defendants charged them more than $100 in improper fees, as required to state a TILA claim. However, the District Court left open the possibility that the named plaintiffs could join other class members who met TILA’s threshold requirement.
In 2008 WMB failed and the FDIC was appointed as receiver. Later that year, the District Court certified a class to proceed with non-TILA claims against the FDIC as receiver, and then stayed the litigation to allow the plaintiffs to exhaust their administrative remedies with the FDIC. The named plaintiffs then filed a “class claim” with the FDIC seeking, among other things, to exhaust their own administrative remedies and those of the unnamed class members, but the FDIC rejected the class claim as not renewable under its administrative claims process. By contrast, the FDIC reviewed and processed but ultimately denied the administrative claims of the nаmed plaintiffs.
After the stay was lifted, the FDIC moved to decertify the class and for partial judgment on the pleadings. The named plaintiffs separately moved to permit Bloom to intervenе as an additional named plaintiff. Bloom’s addition as a named plaintiff ostensibly would have enabled them to assert a new class claim under TILA based on an allegedly improper $120 fеe charged to Bloom. The named plaintiffs also moved to add JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA (“JPMorgan”) as a defendant.
By Memorandum of Decision and Order dated May 13, 2010, the District Court granted the FDIC’s motiоn to decertify the class based on lack of numerosity because only the four named plaintiffs, and none of the unnamed class members, had exhausted administrative remedies with the FDIC. As relevant here, the District Court also denied the motions to add Bloom as an intervening named plaintiff and JPMorgan as a defendant. Bloom filed a timely notice of appeal. The namеd plaintiffs did not appeal.
DISCUSSION
As a threshold matter, we are asked to determine whether Bloom’s appeal is properly before us based on his notice of appeal, see United Airlines, Inc. v. Mc
A. Notice of Appeal
Bloom’s notice of appeal reads, in relevant part, as fоllows:
Plaintiff William Bloom hereby appeals to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit the portion of the district court’s May 13, 2010 Memorandum of Decision and Order (Dkt.302) that: i) decertified the class certified by the district court on December 29, 2008 against Washington Mutual Bank and/or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in its capacity as Recеiver for Washington Mutual Bank (the “FDIC/ WMB” [) ]; and ii) granted in part the FDIC/WMB’s motion for partial judgment on the pleadings.
Joint App’x at 292.
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 3(c) provides: “The notice of aрpeal must ... designate the judgment, order, or part thereof being appealed____” Although we “liberally constru[e] the designation requirement” of Rule 3, R Best Produce, Inc. v. DiSapio,
Here, the District Court deсision resolved four basic issues: (1) decertification of the class, (2) partial judgment on the pleadings, (3) intervention of Bloom as an additional named plaintiff, and (4) join-der of JPMorgan as a deféndant. But Bloom’s notice of appeal states that he is appealing only “the portion[s]” of the District Court decision decertifying the class and granting in part the FDIC’s motion for partial judgment on the pleadings. It makes no mention of the part of the court’s decision denying the plaintiffs’ motion to permit Bloom’s intervention. Nor does it evidence any intent to appeal from the entire decision. Even construing the notice of appeal liberally, under the circumstances we cannot infer. an intent to appeal from the portion оf the decision, unmentioned in the notice, that denied the plaintiffs’ motion to permit Bloom’s intervention. See id. (“Because none of the
B. Appeal by a Nonparty
“As a general rule, only parties to a lawsuit, whether from the outset or through intervention, may appеal an adverse judgment.” Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors of WorldCom,
Bloom was not bound by the judgment decertifying the class. In Devlin v. Scardelletti
For similar reasons, Bloom has also failed to show that he has “an interest affected by the judgment.” Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors of WorldCom,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we DISMISS the appeal.
Notes
. As a result, we do not reaсh the question, which remains unresolved in this Circuit, of whether the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 ("FIRREA”), Pub.L. No. 101-73,103 Stat. 183, requires a plaintiff to administratively exhaust claims already pending against a bank at the time the FDIC was appointed receiver. This question has divided the Circuits. Four of our sister Circuits have held that FIRREA’s exhaustion requirement does not apply to pre-receivership claims. See In re Lewis,
